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Ashley Smith looked ‘hopeless and dejected,’ inquest hears

Ashley Smith appeared desolate and in deep distress about a month before she choked herself to death in her segregation cell, a prisoner’s advocate testified on Tuesday.

Kim Pate, a prisoner's advocate with the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies, said she visited with Ashley Smith, above, on Sept. 24, 2007, and said she "was concerned she might be at risk to herself.”
(THE CANADIAN PRESS file photo)

By Colin PerkelThe Canadian Press

Tues., Oct. 15, 2013

Ashley Smith appeared desolate and in deep distress about a month before she choked herself to death in her segregation cell, a prisoner’s advocate testified on Tuesday.

Kim Pate, executive director of the Canadian Association of Elizabeth Fry Societies, said she visited with Smith — through her cell door — on Sept. 24, 2007.

“I would describe her as looking pretty hopeless and dejected,” Pate said. “I was concerned she might be at risk to herself.”

At that point, Smith had been deprived of all cell effects — with the exception of a security gown — for three or four days, ostensibly because staff believed she had a piece of glass she was refusing to give up.

That meant no blanket, mattress or hygiene products.

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Pate, who has extensive experience advocating for female prisoners, said she felt strongly the teen needed to get out of prison and to a hospital.

Smith, 19, reluctantly agreed to let Pate help draft a formal grievance. A guard had to witness the paperwork because the inmate was not allowed a pen to sign it.

The grievance went into special box, which was not opened until two months after Smith choked herself to death Oct. 19, 2007, while guards stood by and watched.

The inquest has heard how Smith, who was prone to self-injury and acting out, was shunted from segregation in one institution to another, something Pate said was illegal.

Pate noted the Arbour inquiry recommended in 1996 an end to long-term isolation, and either judicial or external oversight for any continued segregation. Canadian prison authorities have not heeded those recommendations, the inquest heard.

She also testified that a UN special rapporteur has recommended solitary confinement be capped at 15 days for adults — zero days for young people or the mentally ill — or be considered torture.

Pate described how difficult it was getting information from Correctional Service of Canada about Smith, despite having the prisoner’s permission to access her personal files.

It took more than three years and decisions from the privacy commissioner and two Federal Court orders before prison authorities turned over the information Pate requested in the spring of 2007. By then, Smith was long dead.

Pate first met Smith through the food slot of her cell door at the Regional Psychiatric Centre in Saskatoon at the end of May 2007.

“She appeared younger than her 19 years. She was an energetic young woman. She was quite typical of an adolescent. A bit feisty. She was not disrespectful in any way,” Pate said.

“She wanted to get out of segregation. Wanted to get home, basically.”

Pate said the use of segregation and punitive measures such as restraints and routine strip searches are often counter-productive, especially for mentally ill inmates.

It’s imperative, she said, to have teams properly trained in dealing with mental-health issues — not guards — who are able to intervene on behalf of such prisoners.

“Once you’re in the system, it’s very difficult to recharacterize that behaviour other than as bad behaviour,” Pate said.

“I have an almost 15-year-old daughter. She has said, ‘This could be anyone of us’.”

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